Put
your hands over your head and stretch. Take a deep breath.
Doesn’t
that feel good?
And
don’t you vicariously feel good when you see your dog or cat or another person
stretch and perhaps yawn?
Many
years ago I learned that, to prevent my back from seizing up on me, I needed to
do a simple stretching exercise before getting out of bed in the morning. I also do a coordination exercise a holistic
chiropractor once taught me that’s supposed to help me think more clearly. And
then I’m ready to, as the camp song goes, “Rise and shine and give God my
glory…”
A
few summers ago, Wade and I attended a yoga class that was all about stretching
and breathing, led by our friend and neighbor José Blanco. It was surprising
how challenging and tiring stretching and breathing can be, as well as how
wonderful it can feel. Yoga, of course, is a spiritual discipline developed in
Hinduism to focus body, mind, and spirit.
A
lot of Christians don’t like to stretch. Orthodox literally means “straight
thinking,” and many Christians like to keep to the straight and narrow, within
the confines of what they consider proper belief and behavior.
Progressive
Christians like to stretch our minds. That means we can stay in our heads way
too much. That’s preferable to not going there at all. As they say, many people
are lost in thought because it’s such unfamiliar territory.
Thankfully,
stretching our minds may stretch our hearts as well, especially if we can catch
our breaths.
Stretching
is an antidote to confinement, an answer to tension, a solution for paralysis
that is not permanent. It helps tissue lubricants flow, as well as the
life-giving, oxygenating, vitality-inducing blood that we need to be nurtured
and grow.
Our
spirits and our spirituality need stretching too.
Jesus
did not teach yoga positions, but he was still a kind of yoga instructor,
because he taught spiritual
stretching. His spirituality stretched the religion of those around him to move
out of ossification—which means to make rigid, callous, or unprogressive—to
move beyond laws written in stone and temples made of stone.
Anyone
who has endured an obnoxious neighbor will know that “loving your neighbor” is
a stretch. Anyone who has struggled with an image of an angry or distant God
knows that “loving God with all your heart, soul, and mind” is a stretch. Those
raised on negative self-images know that
“loving your self” is a stretch. Those taught to fear or hate a stranger realize
that Jesus’ urging to greet even those we don’t know is a stretch. And “loving your enemies” is obviously a
stretch!
By
stretching, a spiritual community becomes expansive and inclusive and nimble. A
breath is a stretch, and Jesus was said to have breathed on his disciples his
Spirit. That Spirit stretched their ability to share his story in the languages
of strangers. That same Spirit has, throughout history, stretched at least
parts of the church to welcome those it formerly resisted, excluded,
marginalized, or persecuted.
And
God’s mystery stretches our spiritual imaginations. In the apostle Paul’s
words to
the Athenians, God “does not live in shrines made by human hands” but causes us “to
search for God and perhaps grope for God.”
Breathe.
Stretch.
Doesn’t
that feel good?
Each Wednesday of Lent, I am
providing links for the following six days, should you wish to use this blog as
a Lenten resource for reflection.
Thursday:
How Well Do Progressive Christians Fish?
Friday: I Love to Tell the Story
Saturday: Keep East Atlanta Weird
Sunday: 9/11: When We Were One
Monday: Praying for “Enemies” (St. Patrick’s
Day: though this post is not about St. Patrick, his answered prayer to be sent
on a mission to those who enslaved him as a youth, the Irish, makes this post a
bit relevant to the day.)
Tuesday: Exorcising Demons
Progressive Christian
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Consider using a post or
quotes in personal reflection, worship, newsletters, and classes, referencing
the blog address when possible: http://chrisglaser.blogspot.com.
Check out past posts in
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Copyright © 2014 by
Chris R. Glaser. Permission granted for non-profit use with attribution of
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Sometimes i can feel like a sunbeam! heh heh.
ReplyDeleteThere is so much stimulation in this post. I laughed outloud with the "lost in thought because it is unfamiliar territory". Thanks.I thought how weird how i resist my exercises of all kinds even though i KNOW that i will be very glad afterward. One thing i found running around in my head was that the awareness i hope to keep glimpsing is ironic in that it is a realization of an "un-awareness" and "innocence".
Great blog. And thanks for the links to use previous reflections as Lenten devotions. And again, thanks for the wonderful retreat at Columbia this past Saturday. I did indeed carry your greetings to the Centering Prayer group last night.
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